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Hundreds of New Species Found!

From a toothy snail to a guitar-shaped fish, here are some of the species scientists recently discovered.

A flat fish with fins on its back is shaped like a guitar.

© 2025 Sergey Bogorodsky/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census

Scientists recently discovered this guitar shark species. It shares some traits with sharks and others with rays.

In the Pacific Ocean, there’s a snail that uses its pointy teeth to inject venom into its prey. A year or so ago, no one knew this snail species existed. It’s one of 866 species that were recently discovered as part of a project called the Ocean Census.

More than 800 scientists from around the world are working together on the Ocean Census, which began in 2023 and is scheduled to last for 10 years. With help from divers, piloted underwater vehicles, and remote (unpiloted) underwater vehicles, they’re looking for what’s never been found before.

The goal of the census is to help scientists understand more about the world’s oceans. Although we know more than ever about the world and even the universe, the oceans are largely unexplored.

“Probably only 10 percent of marine species have been discovered,” coral expert Michelle Taylor told CNN. Taylor is one of the lead scientists with the Ocean Census. 

Scientists believe that between one and two million marine species are still undiscovered.

Here are just a few of the species that Ocean Census scientists have unearthed so far. 

 

A seastar against a black background.

© 2025 Sergey Bogorodsky/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census

What: A new species of sea star

Where: Near the Jotul Hydrothermal Vent Field in the Arctic Ocean

About: Sea stars are scavengers that eat dead plants, animals, and other organic materials (materials that were once living).

A flat fish with fins on its back is shaped like a guitar.

© 2025 Sergey Bogorodsky/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census

What: A new species of guitar shark (also called guitarfish)

Where: Near Tanzania and Mozambique, Africa

About: Named for its flat, elongated body (which is a bit like a guitar), the newly discovered guitar shark is one of 38 known species. Guitar sharks are critically endangered.

A reddish pipehorse rests in sand.

© 2024 Richard Smith/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census

What: A new species of pygmy pipehorse

Where: Off the coast of South Africa

About: These tiny animals, which are related to seahorses, can blend into coral reefs to hide from predators.

Three snail shells against a black background.

© 2024 Peter Stahlschmidt/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census

What: A predatory gastropod (a meat-eating snail)

Where: Near the islands of New Caledonia and Vanuatu, off the eastern coast of Australia

About: This venomous snail bites its prey with “harpoon-like teeth,” according to the Ocean Census. Certain compounds in the shells and bodies of related gastropods have been used in experimental medical treatments.

Coral that has branches like a tiny tree is next to a measuring tape.

© 2024 Asako K. Matsumoto/The Nippon Foundation-Nekton Ocean Census

What: A new species of octocoral

Where: In the Maldives, a group of islands in the Indian Ocean

About: An octocoral is a type of coral that gets its name from the fact that each of its polyps (the individual animals that make up the coral reef) has eight tentacles. Octocorals look a bit like fans.

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Did You Know?

In the 1870s, a ship named HMS Challenger traveled around the world to explore the deeper parts of the oceans for the first time. 

Back then, there were no underwater vehicles. Scientists and crew members aboard Challenger dropped “dredges,” which were like huge bags, far under the water’s surface and then brought them back up to see what living things they had collected. They ended up discovering thousands of new species.

Side by side illustrations of HMS Challenger being tugged by rowing boats and the dredge that was used on the Challenger expedition

© Science History Images/Alamy, © Smith Archive/Alamy; Photo Composite Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.

The ship called HMS Challenger (left) and a dredge (right) that was used to collect species from the deep sea.

Who Am I?

A leafy sea dragon, which looks like a seahorse with leaf-like limbs, swims among kelp.

© Djschreiber/Dreamstime.com

Is that a plant or an animal in the photo?  

The leafy sea dragon is most definitely an animal. Its leaf-like limbs, along with an ability to change color, come in handy when it’s hiding from predators like large fish or waiting for prey like tiny plankton. The leafy sea dragon in the photo is swimming in a type of seaweed called kelp.

In spite of its name, the leafy sea dragon is no sea monster. It may suck up its food like a vacuum cleaner, but it’s only about 12 inches (30 centimeters) long.

Creatures of the Deep Sea

A model of an anglerfish has a lure and an open mouth with sharp teeth.

© Universal History Archive—Universal Images Group/Getty Images

This is a model of an anglerfish, which lives in the deep sea.

The deepest parts of the ocean are so dark and cold that it’s hard to believe anything can live there. Yet scientists have discovered many strange-looking species in these ocean zones. 

The anglerfish has a lure that sticks out from its head. The lure lights up in the dark water, attracting prey. Anglerfish live in such deep waters that they’re extremely hard to catch. The one in the photo is a model—not a real fish.

Learn more at Britannica!

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Word of the Day

abyss

Part of speech:

noun

Definition:

: a hole so deep or a space so great that it cannot be measured

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